darwin: use vim, not vi, to avoid data-loss inducing posix behavior stable
authorKyle Lippincott <spectral@google.com>
Mon, 23 Mar 2020 14:38:00 -0700
branchstable
changeset 44594 c23877cb25a5
parent 44580 3122058df7a5
child 44603 bda050bc9987
darwin: use vim, not vi, to avoid data-loss inducing posix behavior Apple's version of vim, available at opensource.apple.com/release/macos-1015.html (for Catalina, but this behavior has been there for a while) has several tweaks from the version of vim from vim.org. Most of these tweaks appear to be for "Unix2003" compatibility. One of the tweaks is that if any ex command raises an error, the entire process will (when you exit, possibly minutes/hours later) also exit non-zero. Ex commands are things like `:foo`. Luckily, they only enabled this if vim was executed (via a symlink or copying the binary) as `vi` or `ex`. If you start it as `vim`, it doesn't have this behavior, so let's do that. To see this in action, run the following two commands on macOS: ``` $ vi -c ':unknown' -c ':qa' ; echo $? 1 $ vim -c ':unknown' -c ':qa' ; echo $? 0 ``` We don't want to start ignoring non-zero return types from the editor because that will mean you can't use `:cquit` to intentionally exit 1 (which, shows up as 2 if you combine an ex command error and a cquit, but only a 1 if you just use cquit, so we can't differentiate between the two statuses). Since we can't differentiate, we have to assume that all non-zero exit codes are intentional and an indication of the user's desire to not continue with whatever we're doing. If this was a complicated `hg split` or `hg histedit`, this is especially disastrous :( Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D8321
mercurial/ui.py
--- a/mercurial/ui.py	Fri Mar 20 10:04:13 2020 -0400
+++ b/mercurial/ui.py	Mon Mar 23 14:38:00 2020 -0700
@@ -1914,6 +1914,12 @@
             # instead default to E to plumb commit messages to
             # avoid confusion.
             editor = b'E'
+        elif pycompat.isdarwin:
+            # vi on darwin is POSIX compatible to a fault, and that includes
+            # exiting non-zero if you make any mistake when running an ex
+            # command. Proof: `vi -c ':unknown' -c ':qa'; echo $?` produces 1,
+            # while s/vi/vim/ doesn't.
+            editor = b'vim'
         else:
             editor = b'vi'
         return encoding.environ.get(b"HGEDITOR") or self.config(